It Seems Weird How Cheap Amazon Kindles Are — Until You See This Crazy Stat
NICHOLAS CARLSON
DEC. 17, 2013, 10:46 AM 42,452 31
These days, you can buy a new Kindle e-reader from Amazon for $49. Meanwhile, Amazon’s Kindle Fire HDX with an 8.9 inch screen costs $379 – much cheaper than a comparable $499 iPad from Apple. How and why does Amazon charge so little for its gadgets? Both questions are answered with one single stat. During a single year, Kindle owners spend, on average, $443 more buying stuff from Amazon than the average Amazon shopper who does not own a Kindle. Consumer Intelligence Research Partners derived that stat from a survey of 300 subjects who made a purchase at Amazon.com in the three-month period ending Nov. 15, 2013. CIRP estimates that Amazon Kindle device owners spend approximately $1,233 per year buying stuff from Amazon, compared to $790 per year for other customers. “Another way to look at Kindle Fire and Kindle e-Reader is as a portal to Amazon.com,” said Mike Levin of CIRP, in a press release put out to announce the study results (.PDF). “Kindle Fire provides access to everything Amazon sells, while Kindle e-Reader has become the way that Amazon customers buy books, Amazon’s original product line.” Amazon sells Kindles cheap – perhaps at a loss – because it knows getting a device into a customer’s hands means that customer will spend an extra $4,500 at Amazon over the next 10 years.